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- What If ‘The Godfather’ Was Set in the Present Day?
NoFilmSchool (Thursday, 14 August) - Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather hit theaters in 1972, and it redefined and reshaped pop culture’s entire understanding of power, legacy, and loyalty.This generation-spanning influence wasn’t the product of shootouts, swagger, and style—it was rooted in silence, strategy, and slow-burning dread. The Corleones were more than just mobsters—they were monarchs... - The Definitive Ranking of Every Nora Ephron Movie
NoFilmSchool (Thursday, 14 August) - Nora Ephron was one of those few writers who wrote rhythms instead of dialogue. Her words moved like real conversations—only sharper, funnier, and more emotionally precise. In a Hollywood full of noise, she gave us stories rooted in wit, vulnerability, and people who actually sounded like people.While Ephron dabbled in... - Story of the Rise, Fall & Wild Comeback of the Western Genre
NoFilmSchool (Thursday, 14 August) - From dusty trails to epic gunfights, Westerns once ruled Hollywood—then vanished, only to return in surprising new ways.For decades, they were the backbone of American cinema, churning out tales of lone gunmen, lawless towns, and a moral compass constantly swinging between justice and revenge. The Western was almost a worldview... - How Christian Sebaldt, ASC, Was Able to Shoot ‘Final Destination Bloodlines’ on Blackmagic Design Cameras
NoFilmSchool (Wednesday, 13 August) - Article by Christian Sebaldt, ASC.On Final Destination Bloodlines (New Line Cinema/WB/IMAX), my Blackmagic Design URSA Mini Pro 12K and my two Pocket Cinema Camera 6K Pros were instrumental in capturing cool additional angles, as well as essential shots of extensive blue screen stunt sequences. Also, major special effects scenes need... - AI Assistant Editor Tool Eddie AI Expands Support to 30 Languages… But Curiously Still Not Klingon
NoFilmSchool (Wednesday, 13 August) - Eddie AI, the AI assistant editor designed for video professionals, has rolled out a major language update. The platform now supports editing in 30 languages across its modes, from AI logging to Scripted cuts. The update is aimed at making the software more accessible for pros and creators working in... - How 'Alien: Earth' Fits into the 'Alien' Timeline
NoFilmSchool (Wednesday, 13 August) - One of the hard things about making a big movie or TV show in a new universe is honoring all the other titles that have come before it and fitting into that timeline. And that's especially true with the Alien movies, whose stories have spanned hundreds of years in their... - Eddie AI Expands Support to 30 Languages
CineD (Wednesday, 13 August) - Eddie AI, the assistant editor that quietly works behind the scenes to log your footage, dig out soundbites, and line up a rough cut, just got a big update. It now supports 30 languages across all its modes: ChatGPT, Rough Cut, Scripted, and A-roll logging. Let’s take a look. If... - Kodak Faces the Fade-Out – Is This the Final Call?
CineD (Wednesday, 13 August) - Eastman Kodak, the 133-year-old name once synonymous with photography, has warned that it may not be able to keep operating for much longer. In their latest earnings report, the company admitted it has no committed financing or available liquidity to meet roughly $500 million in debt obligations coming due. Shares... - The 80s Film That Saw the Future of the Digital World
NoFilmSchool (Wednesday, 13 August) - In 1982, audiences walked into Tron expecting light shows and arcade vibes—and walked out slightly confused, slightly dazzled, and mostly unsure what they’d just watched.The film wasn’t a hit by traditional standards. Critics were split, Disney wasn’t thrilled with the box office numbers, and Oscar voters even disqualified it from... - Bet You Didn’t Notice 'Jaws' Has Almost No Shark in the First Half — And That’s Genius Writing
NoFilmSchool (Wednesday, 13 August) - What if the scariest monster in a horror movie was the one you never saw?That’s the paradox Jaws (1975) pulls off without flinching. For nearly half its runtime, there’s barely a glimpse of the shark. No close-ups. No massive jaws chomping into swimmers. And yet, your heart pounds every time... - US DJI Drone Ban Looms, What Filmmakers Need to Know – A Deep Dive
CineD (Tuesday, 12 August) - As Washington moves closer to banning DJI drones over national security concerns, shelves in US stores are already running bare – and filmmakers are bracing for a future without the market leader in aerial cinematography. Can US-domestic or allied brands fill the gap, or will creative professionals face higher costs... - Pelican TRVL Suitcases Review – Perfect for Traveling Filmmakers
CineD (Tuesday, 12 August) - Pelican, maker of hard cases aimed at filmmakers and working professionals, now has a line of bags and suitcases called TRVL aimed at the wider traveling public beyond purely “film-folk”. Full review below. Alright, you’ve clicked on CineD (where we are known for talking about film and TV technology), and... - How to Punctuate Narratives With an Extreme Long Shot?
NoFilmSchool (Tuesday, 12 August) - In filmmaking, shot selection determines the viewer's perceived distance from the subject. A close shot brings us intimately near, while a long shot pulls us back to observe from afar. By varying the viewer's position in relation to the subject, we not only determine how much they see but also... - What If Alfred Hitchcock Directed a Modern Thriller Today?
NoFilmSchool (Tuesday, 12 August) - When it comes to the suspense genre, one of the few directors who shaped it and defined it is, well, of course, Alfred Hitchcock. He may not have just shaped the suspense genre; he might have carved it in stone.The director behind Psycho (1960), Rear Window (1954), and Vertigo (1958)... - The First Oscars Were Nothing Like You Imagine
NoFilmSchool (Tuesday, 12 August) - Hollywood, 1929. A room full of movie moguls, silent film stars, and tuxedoed dreamers gathered not for glitz, not for TV ratings (those didn’t exist yet), but for dinner.That’s right—just dinner. The very first Oscars ceremony was a far cry from a spectacle. It was a private banquet at the...